120 Mo. App. 288 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1906
This action was brought against the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company and the St. Joseph & Grand Island Railway Company to recover the value of a box of household goods lost in transportation. Before the case was tried the Grand Island Company was dismissed at the instance of plaintiff, and the cause proceeded against the remaining defendant, resulting in a judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $175, from which defendant appealed.
On June 25, 1903, the Grand Island Company, a common carrier, received from plaintiff at its station at Fairbury, Nebraska, a shipment of household goods (in which was included the box afterwards lost), for transportation from Fairbury to Lehigh, Indian Territory, a point on the line of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company. Plaintiff paid the receiving carrier $21.80, the full amount of the charges demanded for through transportation. This was at the rate of $1.30 per hundred pounds, a rate previously fixed by the agreement of both carriers and in force at the time the shipment was received. A shipping contract was executed by the receiving carrier and plaintiff, in which it was
Defendant insists that the instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence asked by it should have been given, and, first, we will decide the points made in support of that contention. It is urged by defendant that a different cause of action from that alleged in the petition was tried and submitted to the jury; that the cause pleaded is founded on the joint contract of the two carriers, but the recovery was had upon the separate obligation of the appealing defendant.
Notwithstanding the rule expressly recognized by statute (Revised Statutes 1899, section 892), which makes the liability of joint promisors or obligors several as well as joint and consequently permits a plaintiff, at his election, to maintain an action on a joint contract against a part or all of those who are bound to respond to him for a breach thereof, a cause alleged that is based on a joint contract cannot be sustained by proof of a cause founded on the separate contract of one of the alleged joint promisors. In such case the difference between allegation and proof is not to be regarded as a mere variance which is cured by verdict under the statute but as a total failure or proof. [Bagnell Lumber Co., v. Railroad, 180 Mo. 420.] After alleging in the petition that both defendants are common carriers for hire, and that there existed between them a joint traffic arrangement for the transportation of freight from points
The bill of lading issued by the Grand Island Company did not mention any other carrier as a party to the contract of affreightment, nor did it require the contracting carrier to employ the present defendant in the performance of that contract, nor to carry the shipment via Kansas City, the terminus of its line. The Grand Island Company was left free to divert the goods to a connecting carrier at an intermediate point on its own line or to employ another carrier at Kansas City. Though it is clear the contracting carrier contemplated from the first to carry the goods to the end of its own line and there deliver them to the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Company, the latter carrier was not a party to the contract when it was made and incurred no obligation with respect to the shipment during its transportation over the line of the initial carrier. Despite the stipulation in the contract by which the Grand Island Company endeavored to limit its liability to that resulting from its own acts, the contract must be regarded as one for the
Further it is argued by defendant that plaintiff failed to show the delivery of the lost box to defendant. If the property was lost while in the care of the contracting carrier, defendant cannot be held liable for such loss and therefore the burden was on plaintiff to show that defendant actually received the property in the course of its transportation. Plaintiff introduced as a witness the agent of the Grand Island Company at Kansas City, who testified that the shipment arrived intact at Kansas City and was sent over to the defendant company’s yards in wagons. At the same time the waybill and a receipt for the goods were sent by messenger to defendant. A
It is urged by defendant that the receipt itself, considered in connection with other facts in evidence, shows conclusively that defendant did not receive the box of household goods. The receipt contained a list of the articles delivered among which was “1 box books” followed next in the list by “1 box H. H. G’ds” (household goods); when the receipt was returned it was found that defendant had placed a check mark opposite the box of books and at the bottom of the paper had written the word “short” opposite a similar check mark indicating that the box of books was not with the goods received. Counsel argue that evidently the check was mistakenly placed opposite the wrong item and instead should have been placed to indicate the box of household goods and in support of the contention point out that no complaint'
No error was committed in overruling the demurrer to the evidence.
Finally defendant complains of the instruction given on the measure of damages, which directed the jury to assess the damages “at such sum as you find from the evidence to be the reasonable value of any of plaintiff’s goods which defendant received from the St. Joseph & Grand Island railroad at Kansas City and failed and neglected to deliver,” etc. Defendant claims that the contract expressed in the bill of lading fixed the maximum damages plaintiff could recover for loss or damage to the property at five dollars per hundred pounds, and insists that the recovery should have been limited to that amount. If defendant is right in this contention, the verdict should not have exceeded $40, as it is admitted the box weighed 800 pounds. The only expression to be found in the bill of lading of an agreement to limit the amount of the carrier’s liability is in this form. “O. R. Rel. 5.00 Cw’t.” As interpreted by defendant’s witness this means “owner’s risk, carrier’s liability released to $5 per hundred pounds.”
A shipper has the right to have his property carried without any restriction being placed on the carrier’s common-law liability. But the law permits him by con
Defendant endeavored to show by oral evidence that a reduced freight rate in fact was given plaintiff as a consideration for the release agreement, but as the written contract recited no such consideration, the burden was on defendant to establish that fact, if it existed, by competent evidence. This being an interstate shipment, the interstate commerce act required the rates applicable thereto to be filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission and posted in the station of the contracting carrier at Fairbury. Defendant failed to produce a certificate of the secretary of that commission showing the filing of its schedule of rates and the only witness it offered — its rate clerk — admitted he did not know that the schedules were on file nor did he know that they were posted in the station at Fairbury.
Defendant realizing that it failed completely to prove compliance with the interstate commerce act, asks us to follow the rule announced in Wyrick v. Railway, 74 Mo. App. 406, where we said: “In the absence of proof to the contrary, as here, we must presume that the defendant has performed its duty of fixing its tariffs on
In the case of Ward v. Railway, 158 Mo. 226, the Supreme Court appears to hold that a reduced rate, based solely on a reduced valuation of the property shipped and the agreement of the shipper to release all damages he may sustain beyond that valuation, brings the contract within the prohibition of the interstate commerce act. Plaintiff here invokes the broad doctrine announced in that case, but we do not find it necessary to resort to it, and prefer to place our decision of the question in hand on the ground that as the written contract expressed no other consideration for the release agreement than the mere undertaking of the carrier to transport the property, the presumption indulged in the Wyrick case does not obtain; and as defendant failed to show that the reduced rate it claims as the real consideration for the release agréement was included in the schedules of rates filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission, and duly posted in the station at Fairbury,
The instruction under consideration correctly declared the law applicable to the facts in evidence. The judgment is affirmed.